t has been one of the most agreeable tasks of modern science
to trace the wonderfully exact adaptations of the organization of animals to
the physical circumstances amidst which they are destined to live. From the
mandibles of insects to the hand of man, all is seen to be in the most
harmonious relation to the things of the outward world, thus clearly proving
that design presided in the creation of the wholedesign again
implying a designer, another word for a CREATOR.

It would be tiresome to present in this place even a
selection of the proofs which have been adduced on this point. The Natural Theology of Paley, and the Bridgewater Treatises, place the subject
in so clear a light, that the general postulate may be taken for granted. The
physical constitution of animals is, then, to be regarded as in the nicest
congruity and adaptation to the external world.

Less clear ideas have hitherto been entertained on the
mental constitution of animals. The very nature of this constitution is not
as yet generally known or held as ascertained. There is, indeed, a notion of
old standing, that the mind is in some way connected with the brain; but the
metaphysicians insist that it is, in reality, known only by its acts or
effects, and they accordingly present the subject in a form which is unlike
any other kind of science, for it does not so much as pretend to have nature
for its basis. There is a general disinclination to regard mind in connexion
with organization, from a fear that this must needs interfere with the
cherished religious doctrine of the spirit of man, and lower him to the level
of the brutes. A distinction is therefore drawn between our mental
manifestations and those of the lower animals, the latter being comprehended
under the term instinct, while ours are collectively described as mind, mind
being again a received synonyme with soul, the immortal part of man. There is
here a strange system of confusion and error, which it is most imprudent to
regard as essential to religion, since candid investigations of nature tend
to shew its untenableness. There is, in reality, nothing to prevent our
regarding man as specially endowed with an immortal spirit, at the same time
that his ordinary mental manifestations are looked upon as simple phenomena
resulting from organization, those of the lower animals being phenomena
absolutely the same in character, though developed within much narrower
limits.[1]

What has chiefly tended to take mind, in the eyes of
learned and unlearned, out of the range of nature, is its apparently
irregular and wayward character. How different the manifestations in
different beings! how unstable in all!at one time so calm, at another
so wild and impulsive! It seemed impossible that anything so subtle and
aberrant could be part of a system, the main features of which are regularity
and precision. But the irregularity of mental phenomena is only in
appearance. When we give up the individual, and take the mass, we find as
much uniformity of result as in any other class of natural phenomena. The
irregularity is exactly of the same kind as that of the weather. No man can
say what may be the weather of to-morrow; but the quantity of rain which
falls in any particular place in any five years, is precisely the same as the
quantity which falls in any other five years at the same place. Thus, while
it is absolutely impossible to predict of any one Frenchman that during next
year he will commit a crime, it is quite certain that about one in every six
hundred and fifty of the French people will do so, because in past years the
proportion has generally been about that amount, the tendencies to crime in
relation to the temptations being everywhere invariable over a sufficiently
wide range of time. So also, the number of persons taken in charge by the
police in London for being drunk and disorderly on the streets, is, week by
week, a nearly uniform quantity, shewing that the inclination to drink to
excess is always in the mass about the same, regard being had to the existing
temptations or stimulations to this vice. Even mistakes and oversights are of
regular recurrence, for it is found in the post-offices of large cities, that
the number of letters put in without addresses is year by year the same.
Statistics has made out an equally distinct regularity in a wide range, with
regard to many other things concerning the mind, and the doctrine founded
upon it has lately produced a scheme which may well strike the ignorant with
surprise. It was proposed to establish in London a society for ensuring the
integrity of clerks, secretaries, collectors, and all such functionaries as
are usually obliged to find security for money passing through their hands in
the course of business. A gentleman of the highest character as an actuary
spoke of the plan in the following terms:"If a thousand bankers' clerks
were to club together to indemnify their securities, by the payment of one
pound a year each, and if each had given security for 500l., it is
obvious that two in each year might become defaulters to that amount, four to
half the amount, and so on, without rendering the guarantee fund insolvent.
If it be tolerably well ascertained that the instances of dishonesty (yearly)
among such persons amount to one in five hundred, this club would continue to
exist, subject to being in debt in a bad year, to an amount which it would be
able to discharge in good ones. The only question necessary to be asked
previous to the formation of such a club would be,may it not be feared
that the motive to resist dishonesty would be lessened by the existence of
the club, or that ready-made rogues, by belonging to it, might find the means
of obtaining situations which they would otherwise have been kept out of by
the impossibility of obtaining security among those who know them? Suppose
this be sufficiently answered by saying, that none but those who could bring
satisfactory testimony to their previous good character should be allowed to
join the club; that persons who may now hope that a deficiency on their parts
will be made up and hushed up by the relative or friend who is security, will
know very well that the club will have no motive to decline a prosecution, or
to keep the secret, and so on. It then only remains to ask, whether the sum
demanded for the guarantee is sufficient?"[2] The
philosophical principle on which the scheme proceeds, seems to be simply this,
that, amongst a given (large) number of persons of good character, there will
be, within a year or other considerable space of time, a determinate number
of instances in which moral principle and the terror of the consequences of
guilt will be overcome by temptations of a determinate kind and amount, and
thus occasion a certain periodical amount of loss which the association must
make up.

This statistical regularity in moral affairs fully
establishes their being under the presidency of law. Man is now seen to be an
enigma only as an individual; in the mass he is a mathematical problem. It is
hardly necessary to say, much less to argue, that mental action, being proved
to be under law, passes at once into the category of natural things. Its old
metaphysical character vanishes in a moment, and the distinction usually taken
between physical and moral is annulled, as only an error in terms. This view
agrees with what all observation teaches, that mental phenomena flow directly
from the brain. They are seen to be dependent on naturally constituted and
naturally conditioned organs, and thus obedient, like all other organic
phenomena, to law. And how wondrous must the constitution of this apparatus
be, which gives us consciousness of thought and of affection, which makes us
familiar with the numberless things of earth, and enables us to rise in
conception and communion to the councils of God himself! It is matter which
forms the medium or instrumenta little mass which, decomposed, is but
so much common dust; yet in its living constitution, designed, formed, and
sustained by Almighty Wisdom, how admirable its character! how reflective of
the unutterable depths of that Power by which it was so formed, and is so
sustained!

In the mundane economy, mental action takes its place as a
means of providing for the independent existence and the various relations of
animals, each species being furnished according to its special necessities
and the demands of its various relations The nervous systemthe more
comprehensive term for its organic apparatusis variously developed in
different classes and species, and also in different individuals, the volume
or mass bearing a general relation to the amount of power. In the mollusca and
crustacea we see simply a ganglionic cord pervading the extent of the body,
and sending out lateral filaments. In the vertebrata, we find a brain with a
spinal cord, and branching lines of nervous tissue.[3]
But here, as in the general structure of animals, the great principle of
unity is observed. The brain of the vertebrata is merely an expansion of one
of the ganglions of the nervous cord of the mollusca and crustacea. Or the
corresponding ganglion of the mollusca and crustacea may be regarded as the
rudiment of a brain; the superior organ thus appearing as only a farther
development of the inferior. There are many facts which tend to prove that
the action of this apparatus is of an electric nature, a modification of that
surprising agent, which takes magnetism, heat, and light, as other
subordinate forms, and of whose general scope in this great system of things
we are only beginning to have a right conception. It has been found that
simple electricity, artificially produced, and sent along the nerves of a
dead body, excites muscular action. The brain of a newly-killed animal being
taken out, and replaced by a substance which produces electric action, the
operation of digestion, which had been interrupted by the death of the
animal, was resumed, shewing the absolute identity of the brain with a
galvanic battery. Nor is this a very startling idea, when we reflect that
electricity is almost as metaphysical as ever mind was supposed to be. It is
a thing perfectly intangible, weightless. Metal may be magnetized, or heated
to seven hundred of Fahrenheit, without becoming the hundredth part of a
grain heavier. And yet electricity is a real thing, an actual existence in
nature, as witness the effects of heat and light in vegetationthe power
of the galvanic current to re-assemble the particles of copper from a
solution, and make them again into a solid platethe rending force of
the thunderbolt as it strikes the oak; see also how both heat and light
observe the angle of incidence in reflection, as exactly as does the grossest
stone thrown obliquely against a wall. So mental action may be imponderable,
intangible, and yet a real existence, and ruled by the Eternal through his
laws.[4]

Common observation shews a great general superiority of the
human mind over that of the inferior animals. Man's mind is almost infinite in
device; it ranges over all the world; it forms the most wonderful combinations;
it seeks back into the past, and stretches forward into the future; while the
animals generally appear to have a narrow range of thought and action. But so
also has an infant but a limited range, and yet it is mind which works there,
as well as in the most accomplished adults. The difference between mind in the
lower animals and in man is a difference in degree only; it is not a specific
difference. All who have studied animals by actual observation, and even those
who have given a candid attention to the subject in books, must attain more or
less clear convictions of this truth, notwithstanding all the obscurity which
prejudice may have engendered. We see animals capable of affection, jealousy,
envy; we see them quarrel, and conduct quarrels, in the very manner pursued by
the more impulsive of our own race. We see them liable to flattery, inflated
with pride, and dejected by shame. We see them as tender to their young as
human parents are, and as faithful to a trust as the most conscientious of
human servants. The horse is startled by marvellous objects, as a man is. The
dog and many others shew tenacious memory. The dog also proves himself
possessed of imagination, by the act of dreaming. Horses, finding themselves
in want of a shoe, have of their own accord gone to a farrier's shop where
they were shod before. Cats, closed up in rooms, will endeavour to obtain
their liberation by pulling a latch or ringing a bell. It has several times
been observed that in a field of cattle, when one or two were mischievous,
and persisted long in annoying or tyrannizing over the rest, the herd, to all
appearance, consulted, and then, making a united effort, drove the troublers
off the ground. The members of a rookery have also been observed to take
turns in supplying the needs of a family reduced to orphanhood. All of these
are acts of reason, in no respect different from similar acts of men.
Moreover, although there is no heritage of accumulated knowledge amongst the
lower animals, as there is amongst us, they are in some degree susceptible of
those modifications of natural character, and capable of those
accomplishments, which we call education. The taming and domestication of
animals, and the changes thus produced upon their nature in the course of
generations, are results identical with civilization amongst ourselves; and
the quiet, servile steer is probably as unlike the original wild cattle of
this country, as the English gentleman of the present day is unlike the rude
baron of the age of King John. Between a young, unbroken horse, and a trained
one, there is, again, all the difference which exists between a wild youth
reared at his own discretion in the country, and the same person when he has
been toned down by long exposure to the influences of refined society. On the
accomplishments acquired by animals it were superfluous to enter at any
length; but I may advert to the dogs of M. Leonard, as remarkable examples of
what the animal intellect may be trained to. When four pieces of card are
laid down before them, each having a number pronounced once in
connexion with it, they will, after a re-arrangement of the pieces, select
any one named by its number. They also play at dominoes, and with so much
skill as to triumph over biped opponents, whining if the adversary place a
wrong piece, or if they themselves be deficient in a right one. Of extensive
combinations of thought we have no reason to believe that any animal is
capableand yet most of us must feel the force of Walter Scott's remark,
that there was scarcely anything which he would not believe of a dog. There
is a curious result of education in certain animals, namely, that habits to
which they have been trained in some instances become hereditary. For
example, the accomplishment of pointing at game, although a pure result of
education, appears in the young pups brought up apart from their parents and
kind. The peculiar leap of the Irish horse, acquired in the course of
traversing a boggy country, is continued in the progeny brought up in
England. This hereditariness of specific habits suggests a relation to that
form of psychological demonstration usually called instinct; but instinct is
only another term for mind, or is mind in a peculiar stage of development;
and though the fact were otherwise, it could not affect the postulate, that
demonstrations such as have been enumerated are mainly intellectual
demonstrations, not to be distinguished as such from those of human beings.

More than this, the lower animals manifested mental
phenomena long before man existed. While as yet there was no brain capable of
working out a mathematical problem, the economy of the six-sided figure was
exemplified by the instinct of the bee. Ere human musician had whistled or
piped, the owl hooted in B flat, the cuckoo had her song of a falling third,
and the chirp of the cricket was in B. The dog and the elephant prefigured
the sagacity of the human mind. The love of a human mother for her babe was
anticipated by nearly every humbler mammal, the carnaria not excepted. The
peacock strutted, the turkey blustered, and the cock fought for victory, just
as human beings afterwards did, and still do. Our faculty of imitation, on
which so much of our amusement depends, was exercised by the mocking-bird;
and the whole tribe of monkeys must have walked about the pre-human world,
playing off those tricks in which we see the comicality and mischief-making
of our character so curiously exaggerated.

The unity and simplicity which characterize nature give
great antecedent probability to what observation seems about to establish,
that, as the brain of the vertebrate generally is just an advanced condition
of a particular ganglion in the mollusca and crustacea, so are the brains of
the higher and more intelligent mammalia only farther developments of the
brains of the inferior orders of the same class. Or, to the same purpose, it
may be said, that each species has certain superior developments, according
to its needs, while others are in a rudimental or repressed state. This will
more clearly appear after some inquiry has been made into the various powers
comprehended under the term mind.

One of the first and simplest functions of mind is to give
consciousnessconsciousness of our identity and of our existence.
This, apparently, is independent of the senses, which are simply
media, and, as Locke has shewn, the only media, through which ideas
respecting the external world reach the brain. The access of such ideas to
the brain is the act to which the metaphysicians have given the name of
perception. Gall, however, has shewn, by induction from a vast number of
actual cases, that there is a part of the brain devoted to perception, and
that even this is sub-divided into portions which are respectively dedicated
to the reception of different sets of ideas, as those of form, size, colour,
weight, objects in their totality, events in their progress or occurrence,
time, musical sounds, &c. The system of mind invented by this
philosopherthe only one founded upon nature, or which even pretends to
or admits of that necessary basisshews a portion of the brain acting as
a faculty of comic ideas, another of imitation, another of wonder, one for
discriminating or observing differences, and another in which resides the
power of tracing effects to causes. There are also parts of the brain for the
sentimental part of our nature, or the affections, at the head of which stand
the moral feelings of benevolence, conscientiousness, and veneration. Through
these, man stands in relation to himself, his fellow-men, the external world,
and his God; and through these comes most of the happiness of man's life, as
well as that which he derives from the contemplation of the world to come,
and the cultivation of his relation to it, (pure religion.) The other
sentiments may be briefly enumerated, their names being sufficient in general
to denote their functionsfirmness, hope, cautiousness, self-esteem,
love of approbation, secretiveness, marvellousness, constructiveness,
imitation, combativeness, destructiveness, concentrativeness, adhesiveness,
love of the opposite sex, love of offspring, alimentiveness, and love of
life. Through these faculties, man is connected with the external world, and
supplied with active impulses to maintain his place in it as an individual
and as a species. There is also a faculty, (language) for expressing, by
whatever means, (signs, gestures, looks, conventional terms in speech,) the
ideas which arise in the mind. There is a particular state of each of these
faculties, when the ideas of objects once formed by it are revived or
reproduced, a process which seems to be intimately allied with some of the
phenomena of the new science of photography, when images impressed by
reflection of the sun's rays upon sensitive paper are, after a temporary
obliteration, resuscitated on the sheet being exposed to the fumes of
mercury. Such are the phenomena of memory, that handmaid of intellect,
without which there could be no accumulation of mental capital, but an
universal and continual infancy. Conception and imagination appear to be only
intensities, so to speak, of the state of brain in which memory is produced.
On their promptness and power depend most of the exertions which distinguish
the man of arts and letters, and even in no small measure the cultivator of
science.

The faculties above describedthe actual elements of
the mental constitutionare seen in mature man in an indefinite
potentiality and range of action. It is different with the lower animals.
They are there comparatively definite in their power and restricted in their
application. The reader is familiar with what are called instincts in some of
the humbler species, that is, an uniform and unprompted tendency towards
certain particular acts, as the building of cells by the bee, the storing of
provisions by that insect and several others, and the construction of nests
for a coming progeny by birds. This quality is nothing more than a mode of
operation peculiar to the faculties in a humble state of endowment, or early
stage of development. The cell formation of the bee, the house-building of
ants and beavers, the web-spinning of spiders, are but primitive exercises of
constructiveness, the faculty which, indefinite with us, leads to the arts of
the weaver, upholsterer, architect, and mechanist, and makes us often work
delightedly where our labours are in vain, or nearly so. The storing of
provisions by the ants is an exercise of acquisitiveness,the faculty
which with us makes rich men and misers. A vast number of curious devices, by
which insects provide for the protection and subsistence of their young, whom
they are perhaps never to see, are most probably a peculiar restricted effort
of philoprogenitiveness. The common source of this class of acts, and of
common mental operations, is shewn very convincingly by the melting of the
one set into the other. Thus, for example, the bee and bird will make
modifications in the ordinary form of their cells and nests when necessity
compels them. Thus, the alimentiveness of such animals as the dog, usually
definite with regard to quantity and quality, can be pampered or educated up
to a kind of epicurism, that is, an indefiniteness of object and action. The
same faculty acts limitedly in ourselves at first, dictating the special act
of sucking; afterwards it acquires indefiniteness. Such is the real nature of
the distinction between what are called instincts and reason, upon which so
many volumes have been written without profit to the world. All faculties are
instinctive, that is, dependent on internal and inherent impulses. This term
is therefore not specially applicable to either of the recognised modes of
the operation of the faculties. We only, in the one case, see the faculty in
an immature and slightly developed state, in the other, in its most advanced
condition. In the one case it is definite, in the other
indefinite, in its range of action. These terms would perhaps be the
most suitable for expressing the distinction.

In the humblest forms of being we can trace scarcely
anything besides a definite action in a few of the faculties. Generally
speaking, as we ascend in the scale, we see more and more of the faculties
in exercise, and these tending more to the indefinite mode of manifestation.
And for this there is the obvious reason in providence, that the lowest
animals have all of them a very limited sphere of existence, born only to
perform a few functions, and enjoy a brief term of life, and then give way to
another generation, so that they do not need much mental guidance. At higher
points in the scale, the sphere of existence is considerably extended, and
the mental operations are less definite accordingly. The horse, dog, and a
few other rasorial types, noted for their serviceableness to our race, have
the indefinite powers in no small endowment. Man, again, shews very little of
the definite mode of operation, and that little chiefly in childhood, or in
barbarism or idiocy. Destined for a wide field of action, and to be
applicable to infinitely varied contingencies, he has all the faculties
developed to a high pitch of indefiniteness, that he may be ready to act well
in all imaginable cases. His commission, it may be said, gives large
discretionary powers, while that of the inferior animals is limited to a few
precise directions. But when the human brain is congenitally imperfect or
diseased, or when it is in the state of infancy, we see in it an approach
towards the character of the brains of some of the inferior animals. Dr. G.
J. Davey states that he has frequently witnessed, among his patients at the
Hanwell Lunatic Asylum, indications of a particular abnormal cerebration
which forcibly reminded him of the specific healthy characteristics of
animals lower in the scale of organization;[5] and every
one must have observed how often the actions of children, especially in their
moments of play, and where their selfish feelings are concerned, bear a
resemblance to those of certain familiar animals.[6]
Behold, then, the wonderful unity of the whole system. The grades of mind,
like the forms of being, are mere stages of development. In the humbler
forms, but a few of the mental faculties are traceable, just as we see in
them but a few of the lineaments of universal structure. In man the system
has arrived at its highest condition. The few gleams of reason, then, which
we see in the lower animals, are precisely analogous to such a development of
the fore-arm as we find in the paddle of the whale. Causality, comparison,
and other of the nobler faculties, are in them rudimental.

Bound up as we thus are by an identity in the character of
our mental organization with the lower animals, we are yet, it will be
observed, strikingly distinguished from them by this great advance in
development. We have faculties in full force and activity which the animals
either possess not at all, or in so low and obscure a form as to be
equivalent to non-existence. Now these parts of mind are those which connect
us with the things that are not of this world. We have veneration, prompting
us to the worship of the Deity, which the animals lack. We have hope, to
carry us on in thought beyond the bounds of time. We have reason, to enable
us to inquire into the character of the Great Father, and the relation of us,
his humble creatures, towards him. We have conscientiousness and benevolence,
by which we can in a faint and humble measure imitate, in our conduct, that
which he exemplifies in the whole of his wondrous doings. Beyond this, mental
science does not carry us in support of religion: the rest depends on
evidence of a different kind. But it is surely much that we thus discover in
nature a provision for things so important. The existence of faculties having
a regard to such things is a good evidence that such things exist. The face
of God is reflected in the organization of man, as a little pool reflects the
glorious sun.

The affective or sentimental faculties are all of them
liable to operate whenever appropriate objects or stimuli are presented, and
this they do as irresistibly and unerringly as the tree sucks up moisture
which it requires, with only this exception, that one faculty often
interferes with the action of another, and operates instead by force of
superior inherent strength or temporary activity. For example, alimentiveness
may be in powerful operation with regard to its appropriate object, producing
a keen appetite, and yet it may not act, in consequence of the more powerful
operation of cautiousness, warning against evil consequences likely to ensue
from the desired indulgence. This liability to flit from under the control of
one feeling to the control of another, constitutes what is recognised as free
will in man, being nothing more than a vicissitude in the supremacy of the
faculties over each other.

It is a common mistake to suppose that the individuals of
our own species are all of them formed with similar facultiessimilar in
power and tendencyand that education and the influence of circumstances
produce all the differences which we observe. There is not, in the old
systems of mental philosophy, any doctrine more opposite to the truth than
this. It is refuted at once by the great differences of intellectual tendency
and moral disposition to be observed amongst a group of young children who
have been all brought up in circumstances perfectly identicaleven in
twins, who have never been but in one place, under the charge of one nurse,
attended to alike in all respects. The mental characters of individuals are
inherently various, as the forms of their persons and the features of their
faces are; and education and circumstances, though their influence is not to
be despised, are incapable of entirely altering these characters, where they
are strongly developed. That the original characters of mind are dependent on
the volume of particular parts of the brain and the general quality of that
viscus, is proved by induction from an extensive range of observations, the
force of which must have been long since universally acknowledged but for the
unpreparedness of mankind to admit a functional connexion between mind and
body. The different mental characters of individuals may be presumed from
analogy to depend on the same law of development which we have seen
determining forms of being and the mental characters of particular species.
This we may conceive as carrying forward the intellectual powers and moral
dispositions of some to a high pitch, repressing those of others at a
moderate amount, and thus producing all the varieties which we see in our
fellow creatures. Thus a Cuvier and a Newton are but expansions of a clown,
and the person emphatically called the wicked man, is one whose highest moral
feelings are rudimental. Such differences are not confined to our species;
they are only less strongly marked in many of the inferior animals. There are
clever dogs and wicked horses, as well as clever men and wicked men, and
education sharpens the talents, and in some degree regulates the dispositions
of animals, as it does our own. Here I may advert to a very interesting
analogy between the mental characters of the types in the quinary system of
zoology and the characters of individual men. We have seen that the
pre-eminent type is usually endowed with an harmonious assemblage of the
mental qualities belonging to the whole group, while the sub-typical inclines
to ferocity, the rasorial to gentleness, and so on. Now, amongst individuals,
some appear to be almost exclusively of the sub-typical, and others of the
rasorial characters, while to a limited number is given the finely assorted
assemblage of qualities which places them on a parallel with the typical. To
this may be attributed the universality which marks all the very highest
brains, such as those of Shakespeare and Scott, men of whom it has been
remarked that they must have possessed within themselves not only the poet,
but the warrior, the statesman, and the philosopher; and who, moreover,
appear to have had the mild and manly, the moral and the forcible parts of
our nature, in the most perfect balance.

There is, nevertheless, a general adaptation of the mental
constitution of man to the circumstances in which he lives, as there is
between all the parts of nature to each other. The goods of the physical
world are only to be realized by ingenuity and industrious exertion; behold,
accordingly, an intellect full of device, and a fabric of the difficulties
which would go to pieces or destroy itself if it were not kept in constant
occupation. Nature presents to us much that is sublime and beautiful: behold
faculties which delight in contemplating these properties of hers, and in
rising upon them, as upon wings, to the presence of the Eternal. It is also a
world of difficulties and perils, and see how a large portion of our species
are endowed with vigorous powers which take a pleasure in meeting and
overcoming difficulty and danger. Even that principle on which our faculties
are constituteda wide range of freedom in which to act for all various
occasionsnecessitates a resentful faculty, by which individuals may
protect themselves from the undue and capricious exercise of each other's
faculties, and thus preserve their individual rights. So also there is
cautiousness, to give us a tendency to provide against the evils by which we
may be assailed; and secretiveness, to enable us to conceal whatever, being
divulged, would be offensive to others or injurious to ourselves,a
function which obviously has a certain legitimate range of action, however
liable to be abused. The constitution of the mind generally points to a state
of intimate relation of individuals towards society, towards the external
world, and towards things above this world. No individual being is integral
or independent; he is only part of an extensive piece of social mechanism.
The inferior mind, full of rude energy and unregulated impulse, does not more
require a superior nature to act as its master and its mentor, than does the
superior nature require to be surrounded by such rough elements on which to
exercise its high endowments as a ruling and tutelary power. This relation of
each to each produces a vast portion of the active business of life. It is
easy to see that, if we were all alike in our moral tendencies, and all
placed on a medium of perfect moderation in this respect, the world would be
a scene of everlasting dulness and apathy. It requires the variety of
individual constitution to give moral life to the scene.

The indefiniteness of the potentiality of the human
faculties, and the complexity which thus attends their relations, lead
unavoidably to occasional error. If we consider for a moment that there are
not less than thirty such faculties, that they are each given in different
proportions to different persons, that each is at the same time endowed with
a wide discretion as to the force and frequency of its action, and that our
neighbours, the world, and our connexions with something beyond it, are all
exercising an ever-varying influence over us, we cannot be surprised at the
irregularities attending human conduct. It is simply the penalty paid for the
superior endowment. It is here that the imperfection of our nature resides.
Causality and conscientiousness are, it is true, guides over all; but even
these are only faculties of the same indeterminate constitution as the rest,
and partake accordingly of the same inequality of action. Man is therefore a
piece of mechanism, which never can act so as to satisfy his own ideas of
what he might befor he can imagine a state of moral perfection, (as he
can imagine a globe formed of diamonds, pearls, and rubies,) though his
constitution forbids him to realize it. There ever will, in the best disposed
and most disciplined minds, be occasional discrepancies between the amount of
temptation and the power summoned for regulation or resistance, or between
the stimulus and the mobility of the faculty; and hence those errors, and
shortcomings, and excesses, without end, with which the good are constantly
finding cause to charge themselves. There is at the same time even here a
possibility of improvement. In infancy, the impulses are all of them
irregular; a child is cruel, cunning, and false, under the slightest
temptation, but in time learns to control these inclinations, and to be
habitually humane, frank, and truthful. So is human society, in its earliest
stages, sanguinary, aggressive, and deceitful, but in time becomes just,
faithful, and benevolent. To such improvements there is a natural tendency
which will operate in all fair circumstances, though it is not to be expected
that irregular and undue impulses will ever be altogether banished from the
system.

It may still be a puzzle to many, how beings should be
born into the world whose organization is such that they unavoidably, even in
a civilized country, become malefactors. Does God, it may be asked, make
criminals? Does he fashion certain beings with a predestination to evil? He
does not do so; and yet the criminal type of brain, as it is called, comes
into existence in accordance with laws which the Deity has established. It is
not, however, as the result of the first or general intention of those laws,
but as an exception from their ordinary and proper action. The production of
those evilly disposed beings is in this manner. The moral character of the
progeny depends in a general way, (as does the physical character also,) upon
conditions of the parents,both general conditions, and conditions at
the particular time of the commencement of the existence of the new being,
and likewise external conditions affecting the fœtus through the mother.
Now the amount of these conditions is indefinite. The faculties of the
parents, as far as these are concerned, may have oscillated for the time
towards the extreme of sensibility in one direction. The influences upon the
fœtus may have also been of an extreme and unusual kind. Let us suppose
that the conditions upon the whole have been favourable for the development,
not of the higher, but of the lower sentiments, and of the propensities of
the new being, the result will necessarily be a mean type of brain. Here, it
will be observed, God no more decreed an immoral being, than he decreed an
immoral paroxysm of the sentiments. Our perplexity is in considering the
ill-disposed being by himself. He is only a part of a series of phenomena,
traceable to a principle good in the main, but which admits of evil as an
exception. We have seen that it is for wise ends that God leaves our moral
faculties to an indefinite range of action; the general good results of this
arrangement are obvious; but exceptions of evil are inseparable from such a
system, and this is one of them. To come to particular illustrationwhen
a people are oppressed, or kept in a state of slavery, they invariably
contract habits of lying, for the purpose of deceiving and outwitting their
superiors, falsehood being a refuge of the weak under difficulties. What is a
habit in parents becomes an inherent quality in children. We are not,
therefore, to be surprised when a traveller tells us that black children in
the West Indies appear to lie by instinct, and never answer a white person
truly even in the simplest matter. Here we have secretiveness roused in a
people to a state of constant and exalted exercise; an over tendency of the
nervous energy in that direction is the consequence, and a new organic
condition is established. This tells upon the progeny, which comes into the
world with secretiveness excessive in volume and activity. All other evil
characteristics may be readily conceived as being implanted in a new
generation in the same way. And sometimes not one, but several generations,
may be concerned in bringing up the result to a pitch which produces crime.
It is, however, to be observed, that the general tendency of things is to a
limitation, not the extension of such abnormally constituted beings. The
criminal brain finds itself in a social scene where all is against it. It may
struggle on far a time, but the medium and superior natures are never long at
a loss in getting the better of it. The disposal of such beings will always
depend much on the moral state of a community, the degree in which just views
prevail with regard to human nature, and the feelings which accident may have
caused to predominate at a particular time. Where the mass was little
enlightened or refined, and terrors for life or property were highly excited,
malefactors have ever been treated severely. But when order is generally
triumphant, and reason allowed sway, men begin to see the true case of
criminalsnamely, that while one large department are victims of
erroneous social conditions, another are brought to error by tendencies which
they are only unfortunate in having inherited from nature. Criminal
jurisprudence then addresses itself less to the direct punishment than to the
reformation and care-taking of those liable to its attention. And such a
treatment of criminals, it may be farther remarked, so that it stop short of
affording any encouragement to crime, (a point which experience will
determine,) is evidently no more than justice, seeing how accidentally all
forms of the moral constitution are distributed, and how thoroughly mutual
obligation shines throughout the whole frame of societythe strong to
help the weak, the good to redeem and restrain the bad.

The sum of all we have seen of the psychical constitution
of man is, that its Almighty Author has destined it, like everything else, to
be developed from inherent qualities, and to have a mode of action depending
solely on its own organization. Thus the whole is complete on one principle.
The masses of space are formed by law; law makes them in due time theatres of
existence for plants and animals; sensation, disposition, intellect, are all
in like manner developed and sustained in action by law. It is most
interesting to observe into how small a field the whole of the mysteries of
nature thus ultimately resolve themselves. The inorganic has one final
comprehensive law, GRAVITATION. The organic, the other great
department of mundane things, rests in like manner on one law, and that
is,DEVELOPMENT. Nor may even these be after all twain,
but only branches of one still more comprehensive law, the expression of that
unity which man's wit can scarcely separate from Deity itself.

Notes

"Is not God the first cause of
matter as well as of mind? Do not the first attributes of matter lie as
inscrutable in the bosom of Godof its first authoras those of
mind? Has not even matter confessedly received from God the power of
experiencing, in consequence of impressions from the earlier modifications of
matter, certain consciousnesses called sensations of the same? Is not,
therefore, the wonder of matter also receiving the consciousnesses of other
matter called ideas of the mind a wonder more flowing out of and in analogy
with all former wonders, than would be, on the contrary, the wonder of this
faculty of the mind not flowing out of any faculties of matter? Is it not a
wonder which, so far from destroying our hopes of immortality, can establish
that doctrine on a train of inferences and inductions more firmly established
and more connected with each other than the former belief can be, as soon as
we have proved that matter is not perishable, but is only liable to
successive combinations and decombinations.

"Can we look farther back one way into the first origin of
matter than we can look forward the other way into the last developments of
mind? Can we say that God has not in matter itself laid the seeds of every
faculty of mind, rather than that he has made the first principle of mind
entirely distinct from that of matter? Cannot the first cause of all we see
and know have fraught matter itself, from its very beginning, with all the
attributes necessary to develop into mind, as well as he can have from
the first made the attributes of mind wholly different from those of matter,
only in order afterwards, by an imperceptible and incomprehensible link, to
join the two together?

" * * [The decombination of the matter on which mind rests]
is this a reason why mind must be annihilated? Is the temporary reverting of
the mind, and of the sense out of which that mind developes, to their
original component elements, a reason for thinking that they cannot again at
another later period, and in another higher globe, be again recombined, and
with more splendour than before? * * The New Testament does not after death
here promise us a soul hereafter unconnected with matter, and which has no
connexion with our present minda soul independent of time and space.
That is a fanciful idea, not founded on its expressions, when taken in their
just and real meaning. On the contrary, it promises us a mind like the
present, founded on time and space; since it is, like the present, to hold a
certain situation in time, and a certain locality in space. But it promises a
mind situated in portions of time and of space different from the present; a
mind composed of elements of matter more extended, more perfect, and more
glorious: a mind which, formed of materials supplied by different globes, is
consequently able to see farther into the past, and to think farther into the
future, than any mind here existing: a mind which, freed from the partial and
uneven combination incidental to it on this globe, will be exempt from the
changes for evil to which, on the present globe, mind as well as matter is
liable, and will only thenceforth experience the changes for the better which
matter, more justly poised, will alone continue to experience: a mind which,
no longer fearing the death, the total decomposition, to which it is subject
on this globe, will thenceforth continue last and immortal."
HOPE, on the Origin and Prospects of Man, 1831.

Dublin Review, Aug. 1840. The
Guarantee Society has since been established, and is likely to become a useful
and prosperous institution.

The ray, which is considered the
lowest in the scale of fishes, or next to the crustaceans, gives the first
faint representation of a brain in certain scanty and medullary masses, which
appear as merely composed of enlarged origins of the nerves.

If mental action is electric, the
proverbial quickness of thoughtthat is, the quickness of the
transmission of sensation and willmay be presumed to have been brought
to an exact measurement. The speed of light has long been known to be about
192,000 miles per second, and the experiments of Wheatstone have shewn that
the electric agent travels (if I may so speak) at the same rate, thus shewing
a likelihood that one law rules the movements of all the "imponderable
bodies." Mental action may accordingly be presumed to have a rapidity equal to
one hundred and ninety-two thousand miles in the seconda rate evidently
far beyond what is necessary to make the design and execution of any of our
ordinary muscular movements apparently identical in point of time, which they
are.

Phrenological Journal, xv. 338.

A pampered lap-dog, living where
there is another of its own species, will hide any nice morsel which it
cannot eat, under a rug, or in some other by-place, designing to enjoy it
afterwards. I have seen children do the same thing.